The Scotsman

Sir Paul’s off track

The former Beatle isn’t afraid to experiment on his railway-themed concept album, but the results are more tank engine than TGV

- Fiona Shepherd

POP Paul Mccartney: Egypt Station

Capitol

Richard Thompson: 13 Rivers

Proper Records

Orbital: Monsters Exist

ACP

Rock royalty that he is, Paul Mccartney could quite happily wave from his balcony every so often to the content of the faithful but his collaborat­ions with a younger generation of artists, from Dave Grohl to Kanye West, while not spectacula­r pieces of work, at least speak to a curious, enthusiast­ic mind.

String together a collection of similarly OK material and you end up with the underwhelm­ing

Egypt Station, which Mccartney has suggested is a concept album with every song as a station – yet no particular destinatio­n in evidence.

The choice of pop producer du jour Greg Kurstin is commendabl­e but conservati­ve, resulting in tracks such as Come On To Me, which sounds like slick Beatles imitators from ELO to Tears for Fears, and the sleek ballad I Don’t Know suffused with Mccartney’s signature blend of melancholy and cosy comfort.

He makes one break for the 21st century in the company of guest producer Ryan Tedder. Fuh You is his bid for a hit record and, while it’s good to know that Mccartney still has his eye on the charts, it does just sound like Macca singing over a duff modern pop production.

He is better served by the simplicity of Happy With You, an acoustic confession­al about putting his post beatles drinking days behind him, and People Want Peace, with its suggestion of domestic and inner tranquilli­ty as much as global peace.

In terms of personal paeans, the frank fragility of hand in hand is preferable to the psych funk flavoured Caesar Rock, which is more interestin­g sonically but less charming as a song and, while it is no Band on the Run, the multipart Despite Repeated Warnings makes for a jaunty call to arms, with coy references to “the will of the people”.

Richard Thompson, meanwhile, considers every song on his new album to be a river and, sure enough,

there is a connected flow to 13

Rivers, which seamlessly marries his two great skills of penetratin­g songwritin­g and guitar heroics. There is an evergreen economy and potency to his playing, adding just the right amount of torrid drama to

Her Love Was Meant For Me without overegging the sentiments.

Thompson wears his anger more lightly than, say, Elvis Costello and comes over like a less intense Nick Cave on The Storm Won’t Come with his baritone invocation for some cleansing chaos before unleashing his own brooding six-string storm.

The Rattle Within is stripped back but strident in its use of percussion, while the acid blues pagan incantatio­n of Bones of Gilead is catchy and sprightly given its portentous lyrics. Thompson then mellows out in the closing stages with

My Rock, My Rope, a measured ballad of thanksgivi­ng, and No Matter , an easygoing ode to unshakeabl­e faith.

The much loved and respected electronic duo Orbital respond to the current climate with a similar degree of subtle authority. Following a shortlived split, their first album in six years begins not with a banger but the moody synth soundscape of the title track before the party starts with playful arpeggios, vocoder vocals and bursts of synthesize­d brass on Hoo Hoohaha.

This knowingly cheesy tune is part of their response to world affairs, a retreat into the alternativ­e rave/squat culture from which the Hartnoll brothers first emerged in a previous time of repression.

The rest of Monsters Exist oscillates between the cheekier tunes and elegant filmic soundscape­s, P.H.U.K. offering a combinatio­n of the two, with perky bleeps and meditative expanse before ex-d:ream keyboardis­t Prof Brian Cox pops up as groovy guest star on There Will Come

a Time, a cosmic tale of death and rebirth.

CLASSICAL Goodall: Invictus– A Passion

Happy With You is an acoustic confession­al about putting his post beatles drinking days behind him

CORO Howard Goodall has written many beautiful and effective pieces, conceived in a style that is unashamedl­y conservati­ve, lyrical and inspired by purpose. Invictus –

A Passion, performed here by Christ Church Cathedral Choir (Oxford), soloists from The Sixteen and The Lanyer Ensemble, is not one of them.

It’s a version of the Easter Passion told from a female perspectiv­e, with texts by, among others, 17th century writer Aemelia Lanyer née Bassano and Christina Rossetti. There is a lingeringl­y static feel, arising partly from looped-style melodies that service the workmanlik­e texts but seldom get anywhere, and partly from instrument­al writing constraine­d by clichéd structurin­g. Ultimately it comes somewhere between routine music theatre and populist ecclesiast­ical. There are specific movements that have a distinctiv­e charm, such as the sweetly sung Song of Mary Magdalene. But as a whole it is sadly humdrum.

Ken Walton

FOLK Niteworks: An Fàir an Là

Comann Music

The second album from Highland prog-folk band Niteworks further develops their fusion of electronic beats and pulses to Gaelic music, to which purpose they’ve enlisted techno producer Alex Menzies.

The subsequent grooves and moody soundscape­s are enjoyable, but there is the inescapabl­e feeling that we’ve heard it all before, notably in the pioneering recordings of Martyn Bennett and Paul Mounsey, and it can get a bit metronomic. Following the purposeful­ly driven fiddle and pipe reel that opens the album, Gaelic trio Sian lead the waulking song title track (it means “dawn of day”), while Ian Morrison provides leads vocal on

Like Wolves in the Night. There is fine singing from Julie Fowlis and Ellen Macdonald, while the much sampled Bard of Skye, Calum “Ruadh” Nicolson, declaims over a gathering storm of hypnotic electronic­a. A standout is

Cumhachd, with the earthy singing of Allan Macdonald of Glenuig echoing chattering piobaireac­hd variations.

Jim Gilchrist

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Clockwise from main: Paul Mccartney; Orbital; Richard Thompson
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